Benedetto Bordon. Benedetto Bordone was a manuscript editor, miniaturist and cartographer, he was born in Padua, then part of the Republic of Venice.
His most famous work is the Isolario in which he describes all the islands of the known world with their folklore, myths, cultures, climates, situations, and history. Printed in Venice in 1528, the work is an example of a cartographic genre popular in Italy during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
It is intended as an illustrated guide for sailors and attempts to include all the new transatlantic discoveries. Isolario contains an oval depiction of the world, a type of map invented by Bordone and later formalized into the equal-area elliptical Mollweide projection three centuries later.
Bordone's map shows a very distorted Mondo Novo, displaying only the northern regions of South America. North America, depicted as a large island, is labeled Terra del Laboratore, almost certainly a reference to the slave trading in the area in those days.
The book also contains a record of Pizarro's conquest of Peru, the earliest known printed account of this event. Of particular interest in this work are numerous woodcut maps, twelve of which relate to America. One map displays a plan of Temistitan before its destruction by Cortez. Also of interest is a map of Ciampagu the earliest known European-printed map of Japan as an island. Bordone is reputed to have be